Shortly after the invention of photography in the nineteenth century, cameras started to capture ghosts. Manifesting alongside people posed in stiff portraits, these translucent apparitions were supposedly dead family members or lost friends. The practice coincided with the rise of the spiritualism movement, when, through séances and mediums, people connected with the spirit world. Then in the early twentieth century, spiritualist photography took a curious turn. Suddenly, mediums were photographed grappling with strange fibrous materials that emerged from their mouths, noses, and ears, or twisted out from corners like writhing tentacles.

Author Nancy M. West writes in The Centennial Review:

By the turn of the century spirit photographs had developed into elaborate theater—in some cases, even into miniature ‘horror’ shows—as they depicted entranced mediums flailing about, collapsing, spitting out ectoplasm—exhausting themselves into, ironically, a tranquil and seemingly joyful spirit.

In 1944, Helen Duncan became the last woman convicted and imprisoned under Great Britain’s Witchcraft Act of 1735.

It’s thought that Duncan emitted the “ectoplasm”—likely cheesecloth mixed with other bits of paper—by regurgitating it, which was probably quite startling in a dark room during a séance. According to believers, ectoplasm only survived briefly, and disintegrated when exposed to light. Photographs of Duncan show long lengths of ectoplasm tumbling from her mouth, or, more unnervingly, connecting to eerie doll-like figures that hover nearby.

As film scholar Karl Schoonover writes for Art Journal, “the peculiar content of ectoplasm pictures appears to anticipate a shift in popular understandings of photography by exploiting two interrelated ideas about the medium. First, these images accentuate the camera’s ability to record what is otherwise too fleeting for eyesight to register fully. Second, they attribute the documentary strength of the photograph to its indexical nature, the physical connection it shares with the world it represents.” Whereas in nineteenth-century spirit photography the camera purportedly revealed ghosts, the ectoplasm images use the camera more as a witness to this supposed physical reality, and align more closely with our modern ideas about photography as a way of seeing.

Want more stories like this one?

Sign up for the JSTOR Weekly Digest and get the week's best stories right in your inbox.

In a 1922 article for Scientific American, James Black noted that “when our psychic friends endeavor to set out in scientific style the results of their research, and to state just what ectoplasm is and just what it does, it becomes plain that the investigations have been conducted in anything but a scientific manner.” Despite its outlandish theatrics, however, there were those who believed in ectoplasm: “Sir Arthur Conan Doyle recently stated that scientists and psychic researchers were ‘scandalously skeptical’ about ectoplasm.”

Clearly Duncan was taken seriously by Doyle and others, and certainly by the law.She became the last woman convicted and imprisoned under Great Britain’s Witchcraft Act of 1735. Her 1944 conviction followed a séance in which she allegedly made contact with a dead sailor, before the loss of his ship was public knowledge. This supposed clairvoyance was perceived as a breach of wartime security. Further investigation led to a trial for fraudulent witchcraft. As B. Abdy Collins wrote in 1945 for The Modern Law Review, “The recent conviction of Helen Duncan under this Act, and perhaps even more the judgment of the Court of Appeal, have caused no little uneasiness to those who are interested in civil liberties and particularly religious freedom.”

The Witchcraft Act was repealed in 1951. Duncan, who died in 1956, has yet to be exonerated.

JSTOR Daily provides context for current events using scholarship found in JSTOR, a digital library of academic journals, books, and other material. We publish articles grounded in peer-reviewed research and provide free access to that research for all of our readers.

JSTOR is part of ITHAKA, a not-for-profit organization helping the academic community use digital technologies to preserve the scholarly record and to advance research and teaching in sustainable ways.